Tests showed Amy had developed an aggressive form of bone cancer (Image: JAM PRESS) A woman was diagnosed with cancer after initially thinking her sore knee was just an injury from the gym. Help from two physiotherapists, a chiropractor and an osteopath didn’t sort the issue, and Amy Haigh, 27, started to feel ‘really off’ with her knee swelling whenever she exercised, and a ‘dull ache’. After a personal trainer recommended she get checked out, she went through several scans in the summer before an MRI in September – and Amy was horrified to learn the true cause: high-grade bone cancer (osteosarcoma). ‘I lived a very active and healthy lifestyle and never, ever had any health issues besides from the occasional cold,’ Amy, an early childhood teacher from Auckland, New Zealand, told NeedToKnow.co.uk. ‘I have been training in the gym since 2019, I was an avid horse rider, I would spend the weekends walking my dogs or at the beach, and my job was also quite physically demanding. Amy had to undergo chemotherapy but later was told surgery fully removed the cancer (Image: JAM PRESS) ‘I was inconsolable. I cried in my car every day, I cried on my lunch break, and cried in the bathroom. ‘I was horrified it was cancer, but there was also some relief because I had been trying to get to the bottom of this knee pain for so long. I knew something was wrong and I was unfortunately proven right.’ Amy started chemotherapy at the end of October that year. She said: ‘My cycles were 35 days long and also included a two-week hospital stay where I would get plenty of fluids to help flush the chemo out of my system. ‘I found these stays absolutely awful because I felt so lonely and isolated. My doctors and nurses at Auckland Hospital were absolutely incredible, though. ‘After my first round of chemotherapy, I was so sick, they had to lower my dose for the next cycle so I still had some quality of life. Amy learned she had cancer after a gym trainer advised her to go for a check up (Image: JAM PRESS) ‘I also had to have a PET scan which shows if the cancer has gone anywhere else in your body. My family were absolutely terrified as I had been diagnosed with a very aggressive cancer. ‘Luckily, this scan came back clear on November 3, 2022 which was a huge relief. I was told if it had gone to my lungs it would have been very difficult to treat.’ Amy went through two cycles of chemo before an operation in January 2023 to remove the cancerous bone on her femur and replace it with a donor bone from the US. She said: ‘There was a risk that they would have to do a full knee replacement which would have been devastating as a 27-year-old, as then I would have to have surgeries for the rest of my life. ‘My surgeon was incredible and managed to not only remove all of the cancerous bone but also save my knee joint. ‘I remember waking up after the surgery and asking if he had saved my knee joint, and he said he had. There was so much relief and big emotions. ‘When they took out the bone it went to the lab for processing. It showed that all of the cancerous bone was removed and also that the cancer was a far lower grade than they thought. Amy said the experience has made her much stronger than before (Image: JAM PRESS) ‘It showed that the strong chemo they had me on that targeted aggressive cancers with high cell turnover actually did nothing. ‘They then said because the cancer was removed and there were no more cancerous cells in my body, that I was cancer free. ‘This was very surreal news. [It was] bittersweet as I realised I didn’t need to do chemo in the first place and lose my hair and become so sick. But I would rather have had it and not need it than need it and not have it.’ Amy struggled mentally following the surgery and the after-effects of her cancer journey. She has since started therapy to help process the huge change to her life and is making peace with her new normal – which includes reduced mobility and a further surgery to remove scar tissue from her knee joint, and having to leave work while her leg heals. Amy added: ‘I am doing better now, it has taken a lot to get me to this point. Therapy has been so helpful. ‘This isn’t a normal thing for someone to go through, I can’t have worked through these emotions on my own. ‘There was a lot of despair, so much grief for the life I had, the woman I was. I was so hurt at losing my hair, it felt like I lost myself. I miss the carefree girl who didn’t have to think about those things. ‘But I have also done so much growing in the last few months, I am so much stronger than I ever thought I was.
Woman, 27, devastated after sore knee at the gym turns out to be cancer
Sourceexpress.co.uk
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